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How NASA helped India's MOM to MARS

VelocuR

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Remember, NASA's MAVEN reached on September 21 and then India's MOM entered on September 23 in both space cooperation. Similar cooperation from previous Moon mission.

Space Cooperation: A Vital New Front for India-U.S. Relations


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By Jaganath Sankaran | Apr. 7, 2014

Indian scientists preparing to launch their Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) in November 2013 received an usual message — “lucky peanuts” from scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. JPL scientists bring a jar of peanuts to mission countdown — a tradition that goes back to the 1960s, when NASA had multiple mission failures in its Ranger lunar probes. During the launch of Ranger 7, someone in mission control was eating peanuts and passing the container around. The mission finally was a success and the credit went to those peanuts. NASA was sharing its tradition with the Indian Space Research Organisation when it posted a message on ISRO’s MOM Facebook page saying, “Good luck peanuts from NASA to ISRO!” “Go MOM!” and “Dare Mighty Things.”

The message showcases the recent elevated U.S. interest in India’s space program and the growing cooperation between the two space agencies. India’s earlier Moon mission, Chandrayaan-1, had two instruments from the United States: the Mini Synthetic Aperture Radar from the Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory and the Moon Mineralogy Mapper, an imaging spectrometer from Brown University and JPL. The Moon Mineralogy Mapper sensor was used in determining the existence of water molecules on the lunar surface.

India and the United States in recent years have also signed agreements and formed joint working groups to foster data sharing and expert collaboration. In 2012, for example, they signed implementing agreements for active collaborative on the U.S.-led Global Precipitation Measurement project and on the Megha-Tropiques and OceanSat-2 satellites. Both agreements committed the parties to active data sharing and cooperative development of algorithms to understand the data produced.

India’s Megha-Tropiques, a satellite mission to study the water cycle in the tropical region in the context of climate change, will now form part of the Global Precipitation Measurement mission being led by the U.S. and Japan. OceanSat-2 is an Indian remote sensing satellite launched in 2009. Under the cooperative agreement, OceanSat-2 was extensively utilized during Hurricane Sandy to determine ocean surface winds using its radio scatterometer. The image of Hurricane Sandy obtained by the scatterometer on Oct. 29, 2012, was transmitted to NASA and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration showing the storm heading toward the U.S. East Coast.

Most recently NASA and ISRO have agreed to collaborate and launch an L- and S-band synthetic aperture radar satellite. By gathering data in two wavelengths, researchers would be able to more accurately observe and classify varieties in vegetation, measure changes in the amount of carbon stored in vegetation, and observe changes in soil moisture. The two radars operating in L- and S-band are also meant to identify movement of Earth’s surface as small as a fraction of a centimeter, which could in turn help detect stress signals originating from earthquake fault lines and dormant volcanoes.

The joint mission is part of a NASA plan to launch a series of water and drought monitoring satellites over the next several years designed to observe and study Earth’s interconnected natural systems and to better visualize the changes occurring on Earth. The joint mission would fulfill some of the key scientific objectives of NASA’s proposed Deformation, Ecosystem Structure and Dynamics of Ice (DESDynI) environmental satellite. The U.S. National Research Council in 2007 identified DESDynI as a top Earth Science priority, but budget pressures have confined the mission to the drawing board.

This joint project is a welcome addition to the constellation of satellites engaged in climate observation. According to the Global Climate Observation System, approximately 50 essential variables are necessary for the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and about 50 percent of these variables are determined through satellite systems.

Given the budgetary constraints under which spacefaring nations like the United States and India operate, cooperation is a valuable means to furthering our understanding of Earth’s ecosystem. Both NASA and ISRO have made commitments to continue their cooperative engagement in space research.

Jaganath Sankaran is a postdoctoral scholar at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. He wrote his doctoral thesis on space security at the University of Maryland’s Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland.

Space Cooperation: A Vital New Front for India-U.S. Relations | SpaceNews.com

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NASA And India Sign Agreement For Future Cooperation
Feb. 1, 2008


KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. - At a ceremony Friday at the Kennedy Space Center's visitor complex, NASA Administrator Michael Griffin and Indian Space Research Organization Chairman G. Madhavan Nair signed a framework agreement establishing the terms for future cooperation between the two agencies in the exploration and use of outer space for peaceful purposes.

"I am honored to sign this agreement with the India Space Research Organization," Griffin said. "This agreement will allow us to cooperate effectively on a wide range of programs of mutual interest. India has extensive space-related experience, capabilities and infrastructure, and will continue to be a welcome partner in NASA's future space exploration activities."

According to the framework agreement, the two agencies will identify areas of mutual interest and seek to develop cooperative programs or projects in Earth and space science, exploration, human space flight and other activities. The agreement replaces a soon-to- expire agreement signed on Dec. 16, 1997, which fostered bilateral cooperation in the areas of Earth and atmospheric sciences.

In addition to a long history of cooperation in Earth science, NASA and the Indian Space Research Organization also are cooperating on India's first, mission to the moon, Chandrayaan-1, which will be launched later this year. NASA is providing two of the 11 instruments on the spacecraft: the moon mineralogy mapper instrument and the miniature synthetic aperture radar instrument.

NASA - NASA And India Sign Agreement For Future Cooperation

;)
 
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LOL...The EFFORTS which our "Neighbors" make to "UNDERMINE" any success of ours, I am sure if the same "EFFORTS" would have been made to "MAKE THERE OWN HOME" Developed, the MISSION would have been ACCOMPLISHED by now.

You can't deny the truth that NASA helped ISRO projects as well as Mars mission, look back at years. :D
 
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You can't deny the truth that NASA helped ISRO projects as well as Mars mission, look back at years. :D
am I missing something? Where does it say NASA helped India's mars mission. The article talks about cooperation on different projects. Besides cooperation and help are two different things.
 
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Mil gayi tasalli dilko ab so jao...aur phir 50 saal baad uthkar aaj ki tarah kehana " hamein apani talim par jor dena chahiyetha".
You guyz will never learn.
 
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You can't deny the truth that NASA helped ISRO projects as well as Mars mission, look back at years.
Do one thing...take Russia's help ask SUPARCO to build an International Space Station. Let's see how that works out. :)
 
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You may don't like what I say or butthurt, I am not sure why anyway.

NASA's Deep Space Network to Support India's Mars Mission

K.S. Jayaraman | June 28, 2013 04:00pm ET

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BANGALORE, India — NASA's Deep Space Network will provide support for India's Mars orbiter mission scheduled for launch this year as part of expanded cooperative ties between the United States and India, the two governments announced June 24 in New Delhi.

"NASA is providing deep space navigation and tracking support services to this mission during the non-visible period of the Indian Deep Space Network," the governments said in a joint statement released during the three-day visit to India by of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

The Mars mission, developed by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is slated for lift off from India's launch facility at Sriharikota in October or November.

NASA and ISRO have also agreed to "explore further cooperation in such fields as planetary science and heliophysics, as well as potential future missions to the moon and Mars," the joint statement said.

According to the release, the expanded cooperative plan, endorsed by the U.S.-India Civil Space Joint Working Group, includes "measures that will improve the use of earth observation data to promote sustainable development and the compatibility-interoperability between the U.S. Global Positioning System and the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System."
The statement said ISRO and NASA are also exploring the possibility of collaborating on a dual-frequency radar satellite, with the U.S. side supplying the L-band portion and India supplying the S-band portion, for Earth observation studies. ISRO would supply the spacecraft.

The two countries also plan to engage in discussions on areas of mutual interest such as space situational awareness and collision avoidance as part of a Space Security Dialogue, the release said.

Under a Scientist Exchange Program, two NASA scientists specializing in Earth observation will visit ISRO centers in 2013. India has also funded a fellowship program at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., under which an Indian student will pursue a master's program in aerospace engineering at the university.

This story was provided by Space News, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

NASA's Deep Space Network to Support India's Mars Mission
 
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Do one thing...take Russia's help ask SUPARCO to build an International Space Station. :)
Why not chinese help?

You may don't like what I say or butthurt, I am not sure why anyway.

NASA's Deep Space Network to Support India's Mars Mission

K.S. Jayaraman | June 28, 2013 04:00pm ET

View attachment 85933

BANGALORE, India — NASA's Deep Space Network will provide support for India's Mars orbiter mission scheduled for launch this year as part of expanded cooperative ties between the United States and India, the two governments announced June 24 in New Delhi.

"NASA is providing deep space navigation and tracking support services to this mission during the non-visible period of the Indian Deep Space Network," the governments said in a joint statement released during the three-day visit to India by of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

The Mars mission, developed by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is slated for lift off from India's launch facility at Sriharikota in October or November.

NASA and ISRO have also agreed to "explore further cooperation in such fields as planetary science and heliophysics, as well as potential future missions to the moon and Mars," the joint statement said.

According to the release, the expanded cooperative plan, endorsed by the U.S.-India Civil Space Joint Working Group, includes "measures that will improve the use of earth observation data to promote sustainable development and the compatibility-interoperability between the U.S. Global Positioning System and the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System."
The statement said ISRO and NASA are also exploring the possibility of collaborating on a dual-frequency radar satellite, with the U.S. side supplying the L-band portion and India supplying the S-band portion, for Earth observation studies. ISRO would supply the spacecraft.

The two countries also plan to engage in discussions on areas of mutual interest such as space situational awareness and collision avoidance as part of a Space Security Dialogue, the release said.

Under a Scientist Exchange Program, two NASA scientists specializing in Earth observation will visit ISRO centers in 2013. India has also funded a fellowship program at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., under which an Indian student will pursue a master's program in aerospace engineering at the university.

This story was provided by Space News, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

NASA's Deep Space Network to Support India's Mars Mission
@AsianUnion look he provided the proof of MOM existence.
 
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Pathetic twisting of facts to paint an inaccurate picture.

The satellite and launch vehicle was made in India but like all space missions different spaces agencies assisted in certain communication and tracking tasks.

But sure, if it helps you sleep at night- this missions was the result of a Zionist/American/RAW conspiracy all those "Indians" in the ISRO control room were Americans in make up........:coffee:
 
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